dooryards. Work was begun where Mr. B. Burton, a prospector and keen observer, had found bones scattered along a clay hill, at the bottom of steep bluffs, for a distance of eighty feet or more. It was hoped that a skeleton might be unearthed here; but the bones were imperfect and had been broken before weathering out of the rock. Mr. Ike B , another prospector, showed Mr. Douglass a ledge of sandstone near by where skeletions of large Dinosaurs had been buried; but there seemed to be little hope of securing a skeleton as the bones were in very hard sandstone and much broken. The formations was followed for miles with no better results. Near the Green River Gorge a stratum was found form which bones were projection for a distance fo two hundred or three hundred feet; but on digging into the layer it was found that there were few or no perfect bones and some looked as